Factory Girl and the Seamstress

£51.99

Factory Girl and the Seamstress

Imagining Gender and Class in Nineteenth Century American Fiction

Cultural studies

Author: Amal Amireh

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Collection: Studies in American Popular History and Culture

Language: English

Published by: Routledge

Published on: 24th December 2021

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 756 Kb

ISBN: 9781136712609


Study Focus

This book studies the representations of working-class women in canonical and popular American fiction between 1820 and 1870. These representations have been invisible in nineteenth century American literary and cultural studies due to the general view that antebellum writers did not engage with their society's economic and social relaities.

Context and Argument

Against this view and to highlight the cultural importance of working-class women, this study argues that, in responding to industrialization, middle class writers such as Melville, Hawthorne, Fern, Davies, and Phelps used the figures of the factory worker and the seamstress to express their anxieties about unstable gender and class identitites.

Significance

These fictional representations were influenced by, and contributed to, an important but understudied cultural debate about wage labor, working women, and class.

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